This file is copyright of Jens Schriver (c) It originates from the Evil House of Cheat More essays can always be found at: --- http://www.CheatHouse.com --- ... and contact can always be made to: Webmaster@cheathouse.com -------------------------------------------------------------- Essay Name : 1583.txt Uploader : Email Address : Language : English Subject : Fictional Stories Title : Slaughterhouse Five - The effects of war Grade : 95% School System : High School Country : USA Author Comments : well written Teacher Comments : excellent paper Date : Site found at : friend -------------------------------------------------------------- Slaughterhouse Five To me, Slaughterhouse Five is a novel written to show the horror of war. This is shown by the means of the protagonist- Billy Pilgrim. , "Billys phsychic journeys symbolize the wounded soul in need of relief from the horrors of modern life" (Harris, last 2 lines). I happen to disagree with one part of this statement. I think that Billys journeys symbolize the wounded soul in need of relief from the horrors of war. I disagree with Mrs. Harris, because when I read the story, when I saw how miserable Billy was with his life (wife, job, etc.) it still didnt make me feel that this was the reason for Billys phsychic journeys. As I read on, I became positive that the reason for Billys journeys was definitly the Dresden bombing as it was quoted: "Billys response to the holocaust (Dresden) is to escape into an imaginary kidnaping at the hands of the Tralfamadorians......This existential determinnism enables Billy to endure the trauma of Dresden and to live with the threat of apocalypse; it also makes him an ethical basket case..." (Magill, 2729) The Tralfamadorian episodes that Billy goes through are, in my opinion ways that the author conveys his anti-war message. Vonnegut uses the Tralfamadorians to show how war is useless, and he uses them to insinuate that war is part of the human nature. This point is proven by one of the Tralfamadorians directly saying that humans will turn to war for the slightest things, and they are a warlike people. Again, we can use the Tralfamadorian escapes as a way to convey the message of the author-- we see, from the bombing of Dresden, that in the eyes of the author (whose feelings are channeled through Billy) war is pointless. Billy thinks to himself Why would such a horror occur? For what reason? Due to these ponderings, Billy seeks answers within himself therefore, he goes off to "la-la land" to where Billy can "regroup" and seek to find the answers to his questions on the absurdity of war. Billy comes up with his own "answers" to his questions. These answers are given to him by the Tralfamadorians. The aliens say that the bombing of Dresden is not the catastophic tradgedy that Billy perceives it to be, but just one small occurance in the vast pre-determined existence that we live in (according to Tralfamadorian beliefs that state all time is like one moment, there is no past, present, or future), therefore, war is unimportant and useless. The author even hints his view on war being pointless, by making the aliens tell how the universe will be destroyed-- not by war, as the common belief now is, but by when the aliens are testing a new type of fuel. Yet another way that the author portrays his anti-war theme is by the life of the protagonist--Billy Pilgrim. AS we learn in the novel, Billy lives a boring, unhappy life with his wife and children. The author makes his life seem so pointless and poor, because all this had happened as a result of him going to war. If he didnt go to war, he would probably never have met his future wife. Also, from within Vonneguts anti-war message there is some irony spread through the war scenes of this novel. In the first war scene/flashback, we see how the mighty Allied armies are reduced to becoming scavengers and searching for the basic neccessities to live. These are the same Allied armies that were supposed to be proud and fight against evil to let peace rule. This last point bring up another satire of the story, and probably the reason for Vonneguts writing of this book: The United States was supposed to be on the side of good and fight against forces of evil, such as Germany, who was burning people alive in the concentration camps. The satirical part of this is , that what did the the "pure and rightious" United States do?-- burn 150,000 people alive in the the needless bombing of Dresden. Within all the examples I have listed, there is one that stands out among the rest, and is a theme that the author may have included but not have realized. War is bad, according to Vonnegut, but, I think that when the theme says war is bad, it doesnt mean bad in an immediate sense, but in a long lasting sense. By this, I mean that the action of making War is bad, but it is just as bad as its long lasting effects. For example, all of Billys fantasies and all of his sorrow (post war) are effects of the War that have stuck with him and permanently affeted his life. This is also true with the author. As Vonnegut states and/or implies, he was in the war, and to be more specific, he was in Dresden. The whole Dresden incident traumatized both Billy and Vonnegut. Due to his first hand observations on what occurred in Dresden, Vonnegut was so disgusted and shocked (as he states in the novel and outside the novel) about the incident, that it was burned into his mind for years to come. Both Vonnegut and Billy both regret that they were there, but both seem to have a lasting effect- Billy becomes emotionally traumatized and resorts to having fantasies to try to escape the fact of what happened, and Vonnegut was shocked, but yet compelled about what happened and had the impulse to write Slaughterhouse Five, so that he could finally vent out all his feelings about the subject. Both of these, as you can see are long term effects of War. In conclusion, we see that Slaughterhouse Five is underscored by its anti-war theme. Kurt Vonnegut has written a novel depicting the many effects of war and how they relate to characters in the story, including himself. This novel can be considered an autobiographical, in the sense that the narrator (the author) is retelling his story of how war has affected him through the character of Billy Pilgrim. They both undergo the same hardships and traumas as a result of their participation in the war. Truly, this is one of the greatest anti-war novels written to date. --------------------------------------------------------------